I bought another Seagate Momentus XT like I have in my notebook for my new Playstation 3...only then it occurred to me that I don't actually need much storage space in a console, and could probably get by with a 40, 80, or 120GB drive just fine. (I mean I'm limping along decently with a 20GB Xbox drive still! really only need a game or two installed plus some demo space.)
So...would and SSD be worth it? It would affect the Xbox more if you could do it, since you can install games completely to the drive, but still, if nothing else it would be quieter and cooler (which might help the system be quieter too, possibly).
The biggest problem I thought of is the Playstation probably doesn't support TRIM (although I suppose it could...don't know why it would be a big deal to add it to the firmware). BUT without TRIM performance eventually plateaus , right? Just at a lower level, once the drive's been filled up (since it's having to do the read/erase/write cycle every time it writes)?
And anyway, the systems don't support defragging, so either way the performance isn't going to be as good as it could.
Any reason not to do this? And if I do, what's a good type? I know Crucial's drives are supposed to really need TRIM, so that's out.
I'm leaning towards Intel, but if someone can recommend a good Sandforce or whatever drive. I don't know which deals with lack of TRIM better, though I know Intel's TRIM-less first gen drives continued running just fine, relatively speaking.
So...would and SSD be worth it? It would affect the Xbox more if you could do it, since you can install games completely to the drive, but still, if nothing else it would be quieter and cooler (which might help the system be quieter too, possibly).
The biggest problem I thought of is the Playstation probably doesn't support TRIM (although I suppose it could...don't know why it would be a big deal to add it to the firmware). BUT without TRIM performance eventually plateaus , right? Just at a lower level, once the drive's been filled up (since it's having to do the read/erase/write cycle every time it writes)?
And anyway, the systems don't support defragging, so either way the performance isn't going to be as good as it could.
Any reason not to do this? And if I do, what's a good type? I know Crucial's drives are supposed to really need TRIM, so that's out.
I'm leaning towards Intel, but if someone can recommend a good Sandforce or whatever drive. I don't know which deals with lack of TRIM better, though I know Intel's TRIM-less first gen drives continued running just fine, relatively speaking.